Well, uneventful weekend with the exception going to the bathroom 1 to many times. Lazy and did not do a darn thing.
Woke up this morning and there was between 1/4 and 1/2 inch of snow on the ground. Thank whomever that I did not have to drive in it unlike my wife. Since I did not receive any calls I assume she made it to work safely.
Since it was so grayish outside, with lightly falling snow, I decided to turn on the outside lights. Yeah, these are they lights I was going to take down this weekend but didn't 'cause it was way to cold to be messing around outside.
As a matter of fact I can't keep my nose from running and I have a sore throat. All I need is to get sick...
Since I don't feel like going outside in the snow and cold, I'm not taking the lights down but instead I am going to watch the movie "Battleship" (http://www.battleshipmovie.com/).
I guess swearing/cussing can land you in jail! ! Since, lately, I have found myself swearing more, check this story out:
NILES, Mich. (UPI) -- A Michigan woman jailed over the Christmas
holiday for swearing as she left a court clerk's office has been
released on bond, officials said.
LaRue Ford left the Berren County Jail on Friday after her bond was
reduced to $500. She had been jailed since Dec. 18 for cursing in the
court clerk's office.
Ford said she was cussing to herself, not to the clerk, because she
was frustrated as she attempted to clear up an old traffic ticket,
WOOD-TV, Grand Rapids, Mich., said. A district judge ordered her
arrested when she came back with $50 to pay the ticket.
Ford, 49, had no criminal record and has a master's degree in social
work.
"It wasn't necessary, it wasn't even necessary to put me through all
this," she told WOOD.
The American Civil Liberties Union had filed an emergency appeal to
get Ford freed on bond.
AND another story regarding those "annoying" words:
'Whatever' slips in annoying words poll
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (UPI) -- "Whatever" remains the most annoying word
or phrase in the English language, a poll indicates.
"Like" and you know trailed in the show and place positions, the
Marist College Institute for Public Opinion in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.,
reported Thursday.
Almost one-third, 32 percent, of the adults surveyed selected
"whatever." Another 21 percent picked like and 17 percent you know.
"Just sayin" was the only other phrase to break into double digits at
10 percent. Another 9 percent picked Twitterverse and 5 percent
gotcha.
"Whatever" has now been in the top spot for four years running. But it
has lost ground from last year when 38 percent found it most annoying.
Older respondents, non-college graduates and people with incomes under
$50,000 were more likely to be annoyed by "whatever." Respondents
under 45, college graduates and those with larger incomes tended to go
for like.
Marist surveyed 1,246 adults by telephone Dec. 4-6. The margin of
error is 2.8 percentage points.